Earliest Galaxies Detected With Hubble

January 5, 2010

Astronomers, using NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, have broken the distance limit for galaxies by uncovering a primordial population of compact and ultra-blue galaxies that have never been seen before. They are from 13 billion years ago, just 600 to 800 million years after the Big Bang.

These newly found objects are crucial to understanding the evolutionary link between the birth of the first stars, the formation of the first galaxies, and the sequence of evolutionary events that resulted in the assembly of our Milky Way and the other “mature” elliptical and majestic spiral galaxies in today’s universe.

“With the rejuvenated Hubble and its new instruments, we are now entering unchartered territory that is ripe for new discoveries,” says Garth Illingworth of the University of California, Santa Cruz, leader of the HUDF09 survey team that was awarded the time to take the new Wide Field Camera 3 infrared (WFC3/IR) data on the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. The deepest-ever near- infrared view of the universe””the HUDF09 image””has now been combined with the deepest-ever optical image””the original HUDF taken in 2004 with the Advanced Camera for Surveys””to push back the frontier of the search for the first galaxies.

Team member Rychard Bouwens of the University of California, Santa Cruz says that “the faintest galaxies are now showing signs of linkage to the origin of the first stars. They are so blue that they must be extremely deficient in heavy elements, thus representing a population that has nearly primordial characteristics.”

The results are gleaned from the HUDF09 observations, which are deep enough at near-infrared wavelengths to reveal galaxies at redshifts from z=7 to beyond redshift z=8. (The redshift value “z” is a measure of the stretching of the wavelength or “reddening” of starlight due to the expansion of space.) The clear detection of galaxies between z=7 and z=8.5 corresponds to “look-back times” of approximately 12.9 billion years to 13.1 billion years ago.

A longstanding question is whether these early galaxies put out enough radiation for “reionization,” a phenomenon in which light strips off electrons from the surrounding hydrogen gas. A reonization event occurred between about 400 million and 900 million years after the Big Bang and ended the era referred to as the “dark ages,” when the universe, mostly made of hydrogen atoms, was neutral and opaque, and without stars or galaxies.

Astronomers still don’t know which sources of light caused reionization to happen or how much light exactly is needed. Several teams are finding that the number of detected galaxies per unit of volume of space drops off smoothly towards earlier times, and that there may be too few of them to ionize the universe. On the other hand, the early galaxies were possibly extraordinarily efficient at emitting ionizing radiation, or perhaps other more exotic phenomena may need to be invoked.

Hubble’s WFC3/IR camera was able to make deep exposures to uncover new galaxies at roughly 40 times greater efficiency than its earlier infrared camera that was installed in 1997. The WFC3/IR brought new infrared technology to Hubble and accomplished in four days of observing what would have previously taken almost half a year to accomplish.

The WFC3/IR data on the Ultra Deep Field (taken in August 2009) have been analyzed by no less than five international teams of astronomers. A total of 15 papers have been submitted to date by astronomers worldwide. Some of these early results are being presented by various team members on Jan. 6, 2010, at the 215th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Washington, D.C.

The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and the European Space Agency. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute conducts Hubble science operations. The institute is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc. in Washington.

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Image Caption: This composite color image is of the new infrared Hubble Ultradeep Field taken at 1.0 micron (blue), 1.25 micron (green), and 1.6 micron (red) with the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3/IR) aboard the Hubble Space Telescope. Highlighted are the record-breaking high redshift galaxies, where the redshift “z”indicates the amount of stretching the light underwent on its voyage through the expanding universe. Higher redshift means larger distance and hence looking further back in time. The newly found objects are at z~7 (700 million years after the Big Bang: light blue circles) and z~8 (600 million years: dark blue circles) Credit: Image courtesy Ivo Labbe